Atheena Keanani Arasoo - (Un)pacific Relations: Imperial Divisions between Native Hawaiians and Micronesians in Hawaiʻi
This thesis argues that despite longstanding cultural and historical connections between Native Hawaiians and Micronesians, a history of imperialism in Hawaiʻi – the research considers cultural, economic, and political aspects of U.S. empire in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific – has shaped ongoing racial and xenophobic tensions directed from Native Hawaiians to Micronesians…
Alice Cheng - The Socioeconomic Effects of Displacement from Racial Violence: Evidence from the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre
The 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre was one of the most devastating yet overlooked acts of racial violence in American history. During the Massacre, a White mob attacked the predominantly Black Greenwood District in Tulsa and burned Greenwood’s buildings, displacing about 1,000 African Americans and killing an estimated 300. With census data from 1910 to 1930, I examine the socioeconomic and household composition effects of the Massacre on African American residents of Tulsa. Using both a pooled cross-section and panel data analysis, I consistently determine a…